Context, Cognition and Conditionals

Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan (2019)
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Abstract

This book proposes a semantic theory of conditionals that can account for (i) the variability in usages that conditional sentences can be put; and (ii) both conditional sentences of the form ‘if p, q’ and those conditional thoughts that are expressed without using ‘if’. It presents theoretical arguments as well as empirical evidence from English and other languages in support of the thesis that an adequate study of conditionals has to go beyond an analysis of specific sentence forms or lexical items. The resulting perspective on conditionals is one in which conditionality is located at a higher level than that of the sentence; namely, at the level of thought. The author argues that it is only through adopting such a perspective, and with it, a commitment to context-dependent semantics, that we can successfully represent conditional utterances as they are used and understood by ordinary language users. It will be of interest to students and scholars working on the semantics of conditionals in the fields of linguistics (especially semantics and pragmatics) and philosophy of language.

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Chapters

Concluding Remarks: The Need for a Contextualist Outlook on the Study of Conditionals

The conclusion brings together the key findings identified in the analysis of if-conditionals, restating the complexities of meanings that can emerge from the single sentence form ‘if p, q’. It summarises the main arguments that these key findings lead to, including the role of the conditional sente... see more

Towards a Pragmatic Category of Conditionals

This chapter proposes a pragmatic definition for the class of conditional thoughts that includes conditional sentences expressing conditional or non-conditional thoughts, and non-conditional sentences expressing conditional thoughts. Two criteria are offered for inclusion in the pragmatic category u... see more

In Search of Linguistic and Contextual Constraints on Primary Meanings

This chapter aims to provide greater systematicity to the relationship between the two dimensions of the classification offered in Chapter 5 using the theoretical tools of Default Semantics. It starts by specifying the main sources of information that take us from an if-conditional to its primary me... see more

Hypothetical and Biscuit Conditionals: Redrawing the Boundary

This chapter aims to identify some linguistic and contextual constraints on the kinds of speech acts that conditional sentences can be used to communicate. It proposes a six-way classification of conditional if-sentences as they are used in discourse. The classification maintains the familiar ‘hypot... see more

Beyond the Conditional Sentence and Towards Cognitive Reality

This chapter argues that in order to develop a semantics that encompasses conditionals both with and without ‘if’, an explanatorily adequate semantic theory of conditionals in discourse has to kick the object of semantic study beyond that of the sentence to the level of speech acts. It provides a br... see more

Biscuit Conditionals, Conditional Speech Acts and Speech-Act Conditionals

This chapter discusses ‘biscuit conditionals’: a species of conditional in which the consequent is conditionally independent from the antecedent. It identifies a number of criteria by which biscuit conditionals are typically distinguished, before examining various types of biscuit conditionals, incl... see more

Conditional Sentences, Conditional Thoughts

Two key questions that have plagued philosophical and linguistic debates on the meanings of conditionals are: do conditionals have truth conditions? And if so, what are these truth conditions? This chapter begins by revisiting familiar arguments against the material conditional as a psychologically ... see more

Introduction

This chapter acknowledges that the meanings of conditionals have been hotly debated and yet, despite decades of research on this topic, no definitive or agreed upon solution has been reached. Although it has long been acknowledged that conditionals in English are expressed in ways other than using t... see more

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Chi-Hé Elder
University of East Anglia

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References found in this work

Counterfactuals.David K. Lewis - 1973 - Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
Demonstratives: An Essay on the Semantics, Logic, Metaphysics and Epistemology of Demonstratives and other Indexicals.David Kaplan - 1989 - In Joseph Almog, John Perry & Howard Wettstein (eds.), Themes From Kaplan. Oxford University Press. pp. 481-563.
Literal Meaning.François Récanati - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.

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